What's the difference between roaster and roister?

Roaster


Definition:

  • (n.) One who roasts meat.
  • (n.) A contrivance for roasting.
  • (n.) A pig, or other article of food fit for roasting.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Others roasters such as Lock, however, insist it's not a career boost they're after: "I don't feel entirely comfortable with the proceedings," he admits.
  • (2) It began in a tiny space on Monmouth Street in Covent Garden in the late 70s, as the first independent roaster.
  • (3) Similar profiles were also established for roaster-fryer turkey, young tom turkey, and young hen turkey.
  • (4) Treatments were raw soybeans, soybeans roasted in a drum roaster with an exit temperature of 146 degrees C, and those roasted with exit temperatures of 141 or 146 degrees C and held for .5 h. Estimated postruminal available lysine was higher for soybeans roasted and held versus roasted or raw soybeans.
  • (5) Percentage O2 and CO2 were measured in the air in environmentally controlled commercial poultry pens (altitude approximately 300 m) containing broiler or roaster chickens 14 to 56 days of age.
  • (6) Although Monmouth Coffee , arguably the first independent roaster, opened way back in 1978, it was on its own for many years and very small.
  • (7) The burgeoning movement has inspired the forthcoming London Coffee festival, which will bring together 25,000 coffee lovers, independent shops and roasters from all over the country for a weekend of bean indulgence at the end of April.
  • (8) The art of roasting is how you control the rise in temperature,” said the co-founder of Coaltown Coffee Roasters.
  • (9) The nitrogen solubility index, however, decreased as roasting temperatures increased in the case of the granular bed roaster, and it also decreased in the wet-cooking procedure.
  • (10) Abdominal fat accretion was greatest in the dwarf chicks and least in the slow-growing roaster strain when comparisons were made at the same age and the same body weight.
  • (11) What you will notice is the very good coffee (from £1.65, supplied by local roasters, Bailies), the fantastic cakes and scones (around £1.80), and a reasonably priced menu of sandwiches, wraps and daily specials, such as red Thai vegetable curry.
  • (12) Broilers obtained from a commercial processing plant, Athens Canadian Randombred chickens, roasters, and broiler breeder hens were killed via cervical dislocation.
  • (13) Getting roasted: James Hoffmann and Anette Moldvaer of Square Mile Roasters Photograph: Katherine Rose for the Observer Ask coffee geeks for the next key date and they point to the opening in 2005 of Flat White in London's Soho, bringing with it from Australia and New Zealand the drink of the same name: a kind of grown-up sibling to the cappuccino, with two shots of coffee and less milk.
  • (14) "The image of the barista has almost become a fashion statement," says Paul Meikley-Janney, a judge at the World Barista Championship and managing director of Coffee Community, which works with roasters, machine manufacturers and coffee shops, including Costa and SSP .
  • (15) Fiber diameters were significantly larger in the posterior portion of the p. major muscle than in the anterior or middle portions in two of the broiler trials, the female roasters, and the breeder hens.
  • (16) Gastrocnemius muscle growth, however, was greatest in the slow-growing roaster chicks.
  • (17) To understand the industry better I carry on east to a light industrial unit in Hackney, home to the highly regarded Square Mile Roasters .
  • (18) And as “the big four” take investment money to grow, smaller coffee shops – the young indies – will not only fill the space but expand on it by relying on hyper-local focus, transparency and sustainable initiatives like solar-powered spaces (like Salt Lake City’s Publik Coffee Roasters ), minimizing their menus (Culver City, California’s Bar Nine) and even forsaking brick and mortar for a recycled airstream (Seattle’s Slate Coffee ).
  • (19) The fatty acid composition data for dark meat, light meat, or skin of all classes of chicken --broiler-fryer, roaster, and stewing hen--raised on diets equivalent to commercial feed were combined into single tissue-type fatty acid profiles.
  • (20) The second case involved 11-week-old roaster chickens in which H. paragallinarum and Mycoplasma synoviae were isolated.

Roister


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To bluster; to swagger; to bully; to be bold, noisy, vaunting, or turbulent.
  • (n.) See Roisterer.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Long before he first shrugged on Al Swearengen's stripy jacket and oiled his soup-straining moustache, McShane had always had his pick of cads and roister-doisters.
  • (2) Tories and their commentators roistered with delight at the non-shambles of Osborne's spending review.
  • (3) The survey was conducted in two Metropolitan courts; one in an area frequented by vagrants, and the other in a mixed middle-class and working-class area.Few of the offenders were casual roisterers and the majority had a serious drinking problem.
  • (4) (A 2007 survey for AA Legal Services of 2,600 elderly parents and adult children revealed that 70% of offspring fear that they will inherit only their roistering parents' debts .)
  • (5) A leadership election without him could all too easily be portrayed, both by his admirers and the party's opponents, as having no legitimacy: of playing Henry IV without Falstaff or, to be more exact, Prince Hal – the wayward roisterer who, by grace of state, is transformed into "this star of England".